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As president, vice-president and president-elect of the International Association for Plant Taxonomy (IAPT), we are concerned that Stephen Garnett and Les Christidis misrepresent the role of the IAPT in governing the nomenclature of algae, fungi and plants (Nature546, 25–27; 2017). The IAPT is not the equivalent of the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature, as they suggest.

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Seed banks are used by both conservationists and taxonomists to study plants.

The IAPT provides the means for the community to undertake nomenclatural work, including our journal Taxon for publishing proposals. The governance of the rules for naming is laid out in Division III of the International Code of Nomenclature for Algae, Fungi and Plants (ICN; see go.nature.com/2rvaip8), and is in the hands of the wider community. The ICN is debated and changed every six years by hundreds of international specialists as part of the International Botanical Congress, which this year is to be held in Shenzhen, China.

The role of the ICN is to facilitate, not to govern, the science of understanding life on Earth. We believe that fostering excellent science generally involves community engagement rather than regulation. The rules for naming algae, fungi and plants are governed collaboratively by the global community, not by the IAPT.